Pastor Ken
Friday, April 30, 2010
New Churches
As I write this I am sitting in a "bootcamp" for new church planters - I am acting as a coach. My job is to get them to dig deeper and ask more questions. What impresses me is their dedication to expanding the kingdom. We have the message of life and over 2/3s of SoCal either hasn't heard or hasn't understood it. How awesome to hear the vision of these who are committing themselves to taking that message and helping them to refine that vision and plan for ways to bring it to fruition. It is a truly humbling experience.
Wednesday, April 28, 2010
Trust God
I must confess that I have a hard time blogging when I don't think I have anything to say that even I, let alone anyone else, would like to hear or read. So here it has been 5 days again. There are so few things that seem important enough to put out there in print (or electrons, as the case may be). So here is my blog for the day: Trust God! Everything else falls into place and into perspective when you do. I have tried to live by that principle for over 39 years now and have found that when I do is when things are best. Is that a coincidence? Perhaps, but I find the coincidences come more often when I do it, so I will keep trusting God. Have a great day.
Pastor Ken
Friday, April 23, 2010
Still relevant after 100 years
It was 100 years ago today that Former President Theodore Roosevelt said the following at the Sorbonne in Paris:
It is not the critic who counts; not the man who points out how the strong man stumbles, or where the doer of deed could have done them better. The credit belongs to the man who is actually in the arena, whose face is marred by dust and sweat and blood; who strives valiantly; who errs, and comes up short again and again, because there is no effort without error and shortcoming; but who does actually strive to do the deeds; who knows the great enthusiasms, the great devotions, who spends himself in a worthy cause; who at the best knows in the end the triumph of high achievement, and who at the worst, if he fails, at least fails while daring greatly, so that his place shall never be with those cold and timid souls who know neither victory nor defeat."
Go out and dare great things for God!
Pastor Ken
Wednesday, April 21, 2010
Death and Anger
This past Sunday we had as guests in our church a couple who have served as missionaries in Haiti since 1965. They had been to Haiti twice since the earthquake in January. As you can imagine, they had harrowing stories of death and survival, as well as updates on the ongoing relief effort. But what impressed me the most was their report about the reactions of the survivors to surviving when so many of them had lost loved ones. In their experience, virtually every person they talked to, even when they had lost children or spouses or other family and friends not only did not express any anger towards God, but expressed thanks for having been spared and a new commitment to determining the reason God had spared them and fulfill His purposes in their lives. And that just blew me away. Probably the most common reaction I have run across here in the States is anger at God for allowing this earthquake and for so many to have been killed. Indeed, it is further proof for many that there is no God, since they could not imagine how a loving God would allow so many innocent people to die in such a horrible way. So how is it that so many Haitians react with renewed faith and commitment, especially when they are the ones who are really suffering?
It occurs to me that one big reason may be a more realistic view of life on the part of the Haitians than we have. As we have grown more comfortable and lived longer we seem to have adopted the attitude that we deserve a long and comfortable life. But the Haitians seem to think that all of us are going to die anyway, and that the extension of life, especially in tragic circumstances brings a responsibility to God and one's fellow human to serve them. Now, I must confess, I understand emotionally the American response much better than the Haitian one. But when I think about it, the Haitians are much closer to the truth. If there is a tragedy in death, then it is death itself which is the tragedy. And that is indeed what the Bible says - man was never intended to die, and the offer of God is eternal life in Jesus Christ. So it is the extension of life which is the blessing, not the cutting short of life which is a greater tragedy. Now I know that there are questions of the means of death, but we all know that many times the greater pain is suffered by one who survives and faces multiple surgeries, etc. I don't think this small blog answers or even acknowledges all the questions or objections, but I find myself convicted by the response of my Haitian brothers and sisters. Perhaps I should be trying to determine why God has allowed me to live so long and fulfill that purpose. Just a thought.
Pastor Ken
Monday, April 19, 2010
Finding Meaning
So many of us are looking for purpose or meaning in life. Dietrich Bonhoeffer perhaps said it best in his Letters and Papers from Prison (p. 207): In these turbulent times we repeatedly lose sight of what really makes life worth living We think that, because this or that person is living, it makes sense for us to live too. But the truth is that if this earth was good enough for the man Jesus Christ, if such a man as Jesus lived, then, and only then, has life a meaning for us. If Jesus had not lived, then our life would be meaningless, in spite of all the other people whom we know and honor and love. Perhaps we now sometimes forget the meaning and purpose of our profession. But is not this the simplest way of putting it? The unbiblical notion of "meaning" is indeed only a translation of what the Bible calls "promise."
Without Jesus - without the promise of meaning found in a living God who loves and cares for and forgives us, life is at best a cruel joke - an absurdity into which we try, in vain, to inject real meaning. But the resurrected Son of God gives life true meaning, and we find our own meaningfulness only in Him.
Pastor Ken
Thursday, April 15, 2010
Tax Day
I am not sure there is anyone who likes, let alone loves Tax Day. In the musical 1776 John Adams is upbraided by a fellow delegate to the Continental Congress for thinking his taxes are too high. The other delegate says, "well, so are mine!" I heard on the radio today that around half of all Americans think that taxes are basically fair - and that 47% of Americans pay no income tax! I guess it is easy to think it is fair if you don't pay! And yet, taxes are a necessary part of life. We expect so much of our government, and it all must be paid for somehow. And in a Republic where we all have representation, we have no one to blame but ourselves if our taxes are too high. But is there a Christian response to tax day? Actually, yes there is. We all remember the story of Jesus telling Peter to go get a fish from the lake and finding a roman coin in the mouth. Jesus told Peter - and by extension all of us - that we have a responsibility to render to our government what our government requires. And this in an Empire where the common person had not say so in who was to govern or what the laws would be! Now, I confess, I wouldn't mind finding enough to pay my taxes for the year in the mouth of a fish - or dog or any other animal. But until then, I will keep on paying my taxes. Of course, I will keep on complaining, too. That is only American!
Pastor Ken
Tuesday, April 13, 2010
Waiting for Understanding
It has been a little more than a week since Easter. For most of us today, that means that summer and vacations are just around the corner. But for the first disciples, it was a time of intense learning and unlearning. First, they were unlearning everything they knew about - well just about everything. They were unlearning everything they thought they knew about the Messiah. Jesus was obviously not going to establish a secular Jewish kingdom after defeating the Romans. They were unlearning what they thought they knew about their own futures. It was clear that they were not going to sit on thrones at Jesus' side in that new kingdom that was not coming, but they were wondering whether that meant they were going to go back to their old jobs. In fact, several tried, until Jesus went to Galilee, and called them back to following Him again. But most of all, they were unlearning everything they thought they knew about life itself - death was obviously not the final word. Jesus had come back to life again after a horrendous death - and could do things no sane person would ever expect to be able to do, like walk through walls! Little did they know that in just a few weeks Jesus would literally disappear before their eyes as He rose into heaven. The disciples were unlearning quite a lot. But it was necessary in order for them to start learning some things - things like the nature of God's kingdom and of human life. So many times we find ourselves in a similar situation - in the middle of the painful process of unlearning and not yet knowing what will take its place. But hang in there. God is not done with you yet, and we can't even imagine what the end is going to look like!
Pastor Ken
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